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Vietnam: On the Threshold of Change?
| Article
# : |
16431 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1989 |
3,617 Words |
| Author
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Eric Crystal Eric Crystal is program coordinator at the Center for South
and Southeast Asia Studies, University of California at
Berkeley. |
The most enduring impression of Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) and Hanoi I gleaned from three weeks in Vietnam in January 1989 is that of a nation struggling to reconcile itself with the changing realities of a geographic region, world economy, and rapidly shifting international order. Confronting explosive population growth, stagnant economic performance, and increasing unease concerning its relationship with the Soviet Union, Vietnam is now experimenting with new and unorthodox approaches to resolving its many development dilemmas. Where once restaurants employing more than a handful of people could only be managed by the state, now private firms compete with government-managed eating establishments. Where once crop selection was mandated by planners from afar (in the South oftentimes by newly arrived northern cadres with little familiarity with local conditions), now farmers may opt out of collective farming situations and sell their grain at free-market prices.
Everywhere in Ho Chi Minh City the irresistible throb of the free-market economy dominates the tenor of everyday life. Food in the city was in most ample supply. New construction of residences and businesses was in clear evidence. Manifestations of a shift from an orientation to Eastern Europe toward integration in the free-market economies of Southeast Asia were everywhere to be observed. Although there were not many automobiles in the city, new Japanese vans and sedans predominated over new Soviet-imported Lada and Volga passenger cars and Latvia mini-vans. Kodak, Phillips, and Sony trademark signs are proudly positioned in front of shops. Russian, French, and English foreign-language advertisements in shops foreigners are likely to frequent can be frequently observed. But English is certainly now predominant over Russain, even to the extent of "Merry
... (1993 of 22271 Characters)
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